Sunday, 1 March 2015

Chapter Six: The Thought That Ruined My Life – Part Two

In brace position

On the carpet where I
crashed

There’s no oxygen

I’m in the process of taking things out of my suitcase; for
a six night stay with the family I used to au-pair for I’ve exceeded my luggage
allowance by 2kg (it’s years before I’ll learn to pack light). I’m kneeling
down, trying not to hear the fireworks outside and not to think about Coin Eyes
or plane crashes or the knives I used to hide, with a half-folded t-shirt in my
hands when, with a bang, it happens.

“Stab the children.”

Wait… what? “Stab the
children.” I shake my head fiercely, in horror, but it’s too late; I’ve
thought it. My heart-rate quickens, vomit surges in my oesophagus, I grip the
t-shirt and it becomes damp with sweat from my palms. Like a fire, the idea is
spreading through my mind, destroying the rational thoughts which, moments ago,
were its pillars. I try to put it out with “I don’t want to”; but this only has
the effect of throwing oil over the thought and it explodes with more force
than before. Now I can see myself stabbing them, over and over again. I double
over and start chanting “no, no, no” in an attempt to erase the image from my
imagination, but it’s no good. I’ve killed them.

I never really believed it was possible to be possessed by
evil spirits, but this – surely – is the only explanation for what I’m experiencing.
That or I’ve gone insane. Yes, maybe that’s it. I’m very, very ill and I don’t
want to be. I bury my face into the t-shirt and start to sob. Crying feels
wonderful and for a while it’s all I’m focused on. I even wonder, if I cry hard
enough, if I can force the demonic ideas out through by eyes.

Eventually I am sufficiently calmed that I can start
thinking rationally about this problem. “I won’t be their nanny this time, so I
won’t be asked to look after them” I reason and relief washes over me. But the
imp is still there – I haven’t cried it out after all: “I might sleep walk and
do it.” Now that the initial shock is over, I’m ready with my answers: “I have
never sleepwalked in my life” I think back to myself, triumphant. Finally I
convince myself that I’ll be able to stop myself killing anyone in the night by
drinking so much wine at dinner that I sleep too heavily to sleepwalk. I’ll also
move the chair in front of the door, just in case, so that if I do try to leave
my room it makes a noise which wakes everyone else up and then they’ll stop me.
It might be ok after all.

By now I’m locked in a terrible dialogue with myself. I can
stop myself from acting on this idea, but that doesn’t explain why I had it in
the first place. I’m still curled up in a ball when the next thought comes: “I
must be thinking this because I want to.”
But I really don’t. Ever since I had the first thought I’ve been paralysed with
fear. I start to chew the t-shirt as the awful truth about me unfolds. I always
knew I wasn’t normal, that there was something
wrong with me. What did those other kids say? – Freak, loony, weirdo. They were right. This is it. I’m a
psychopath. I start to pray, “Please God, not this, not me, don’t let me hurt
those children. I’m so sorry, I’m so so sorry for whatever I’ve done to deserve
these thoughts; don’t punish them for my badness, or my family. Please.”

For a second I try to imagine actually really hurting
someone, to see if I like the idea. I gag. This isn’t me. I can’t stand
violence; I’m a vegan, I’m a pacifist, I can’t even bear to watch gory movies...
And yet, for the last hour I’ve been thinking about stabbing children with
kitchen knives and no matter how hard I try to make the thoughts go away, they
won’t. It’s as if my mind wants them there. That must mean something. I can
hardly breathe I’m so afraid. “Who am I?” I whisper.

I sit up. Around me, all is as it was an hour ago
– the suitcase open; the bed roughly made; the pictures and ornaments in their
places; the t-shirt in my hands, now crumpled and snotty. Only the fireworks
outside have stopped and the unanswered question echoes in the silence.

2 comments:

I can understand why that one was hard to write. Sometimes the strongest voices are almost the ones that know they are most out of order and can feel like the plague. Hoping after the exposure of writing ur at peace. Sending solidarity 🌸🌸🌸

Oh you poor thing! I remember when my son went through such a similar thing. Nothing would convince him otherwise. Before I went through it with him, I had no idea how debilitating OCD could be! It sounds like you had it real bad too. The weirdest thing about the illness is that the person with OCD can be so scared they're going to do something awful yet they are often the nicest, gentlest people around (both my two children with OCD became vegan too, and they wouldn't hurt any other creature...only themselves). I truly hope it isn't this bad for you any more, and a good CBT therapist has shown you the way through it! ((((Hug))))